Manakacha Formation
![]() | This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (January 2021) |
Manakacha Formation Stratigraphic range: Upper Pennsylvanian, [1] | |
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![]() representative Supai Group 'redbeds' (large lower cliff - Manakacha Formation (upon debris slope of Watahomigi Formation,) sitting on resistant, extremely hard platform of the Redwall Limestone, of the same red color) | |
Type | Geologic unit |
Unit of | Supai Group |
Underlies | Wescogame Formation, (3rd member)-Supai Group |
Overlies | Watahomigi Formation, (1st member)-Supai Group-312 Ma |
Thickness | 200 feet (61 m) max (100-200 ft typical) |
Lithology | |
Primary | sandstone, siltstone |
Location | |
Region | Colorado Plateau, southwest and south |
Extent | Grand Canyon, Verde Valley, and basement rocks of Mogollon Rim and central & east-northeast Arizona |
The (Upper) Late Pennsylvanian Manakacha Formation is a cliff-forming, sandstone, red-orange geologic unit, formed from an addition of eolian sand,[2] added to marine transgression deposits, (siltstones, etc.), and found throughout sections of the Grand Canyon, in Arizona, Southwest United States. It is one of the lower members of the Supai Group 'redbeds' (member two of four major units), with the Supai Group found in other sections of Arizona, especially in the Verde Valley region, or as a basement unit below the Mogollon Rim, just eastwards or part of the basement Supai Group of the southwest & south Colorado Plateau.
Coeval units of Wescogame Formation and the Supai Group are replaced by geologic units formed from geology deposited in relationship to the former basin to the south-southeast in Arizona, the , of the Pedregosa Sea, which extended northeast to the Verde Valley region, and the earlier deposition of the red rock sandstone of the , of the Sedona, Arizona region, (Oak Creek Canyon, Sycamore Canyon, and other related sub-regions).
Geologic sequence[]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cd/Aerial_view_of_Gunther_Castle.jpg/275px-Aerial_view_of_Gunther_Castle.jpg)
highest prominence-Cliff of Esplanade Sandstone, 3rd prominence-massive cliff of Manakacha Formation
(all peaks on an extensive, flat platform of resistant Redwall Limestone)
The Late Pennsylvanian-Early Permian geologic sequence of the Supai Group common in the Grand Canyon:[3] The Pennsylvanian is the Late Carboniferous.
- Supai Group
- 4-Esplanade Sandstone-(Early Permian)
- 3B-( at west Grand Canyon & Nevada)
- 3-Wescogame Formation-(Late Pennsylvanian)
- 2-Manakacha Formation
- 1-Watahomigi Formation
- 4-Esplanade Sandstone-(Early Permian)
The Supai Group members were created from marine (oceanic) sequences of marine transgression, and regression, thus the alternating sandstone, siltsones, conglomerate subsections (facies); the subsections are not always a continuous transition into the above section, mostly due to ocean levels, falling, or rising, glaciation, or regional subsidence-(basins, etc.) or uplift of land. Today's Wasatch Front is the approximate lineage, NNE to SSW of the western coast region of North America from where the oceans transgressed. The ancient -(Antler orogeny, off-shore volcanic island arch(es)), of ancient Nevada supplied material, from the west, off the 'ancestral' West Coast. The continent supplied material from the east, both directions supplying the offshore basin, the which became part of the Basin and Range Province, in later epochs. Three other basins were involved in this history: southwest of the Ancestral Rocky Mountains was the Paradox Basin-(eastern Utah to Southwest Colorado), northeast was the -(NW Colorado, NE Utah, SW Wyoming); the was north-northwest, at present day northwest Utah.
Supai Group and Hermosa Group, coeval units[]
The approximate coeval Supai and Hermosa Groups, Arizona, Utah, and northwest Colorado:[4]
Arizona — Grand Canyon & central-northeast AZ |
Utah — east & southeast | (northeast)-UT (northwest)-CO (proto)-Uintah Basin region | |
---|---|---|---|
Supai Group ~340-(330) to 285 Ma |
Hermosa Group | "Ancestral Rocky Mtns" (eroded to sea level, 165 Ma)[5] |
Hermosa Group |
4-Esplanade Sandstone-(Grand Canyon & Verde Valley region) | Cedar Mesa Sandstone | "Ancestral Rocky Mtns" | xxxxxxx |
3B--(west)-Grand Canyon, & NV | Elephant Canyon Formation-(east & southeast) Utah | "Ancestral Rocky Mtns" | Hermosa members? |
3-Wescogame Formation | (Hermosa) | "Ancestral Rocky Mtns" | Hermosa members? |
2-Manakacha Formation | (Hermosa) | "Ancestral Rocky Mtns" | Hermosa members? |
1-Watahomigi Formation | (Hermosa) | "Ancestral Rocky Mtns" | Hermosa members? |
Because marine transgressions cover distances, over time, the coeval units are separated by distance, and type of deposition material; the local subsidence, or uplift, as well as glaciation, and sea level changes, can cause variations in the deposition sequences of transgression-regressions. The ocean was to the west of the proto-North American continent, but also northwest, or southwest.
Manakacha Formation, large cliff above debris slope of lowest unit-1 Watahomigi Formation slope.
Isis Temple, with complete Supai Group for Grand Canyon; ( miles westward in Grand Canyon, and Nevada)Close-up of 'redbeds'
Massive lower cliff (unit-2), Manakacha Formation
References[]
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manakacha Formation. |
- ^ Blakey and Ranney (2008): 300 Ma map, p. 39, 312 Ma, Manakacha Formation map, p. 33.
- ^ Blakey and Ranney (2008) p. 40.
- ^ Blakey and Ranney (2008) p. XVIII.
- ^ Blakey and Ranney (2008): "Geologic X-sections", (cross-sections), p. XVIII.
- ^ Blakey and Ranney (2008): 165 Ma map: (upper)-Carmel Formation, with Sundance Sea, p. 76 and p. 78.
- Geologic formations of Arizona
- Natural history of the Grand Canyon
- Carboniferous Arizona
- Carboniferous System of North America